[HTML][HTML] Deciphering ion transporters, kinases and PDZ-adaptor molecules that mediate guanylate cyclase C agonist-dependent intestinal fluid loss in vivo

Y Liu, Q Tan, B Riederer, G di Stefano… - Biochemical …, 2020 - Elsevier
Y Liu, Q Tan, B Riederer, G di Stefano, D Römermann, J Qian, J Reiner, U Seidler
Biochemical Pharmacology, 2020Elsevier
Background The molecular basis for heat-stable Escherichia coli enterotoxin (STa) action
and its synthetic analogue linaclotide is well understood at the enterocyte level.
Pharmacologic strategies to prevent STa-induced intestinal fluid loss by inhibiting its effector
molecules, however, have achieved insufficient inhibition in vivo. Aims and experimental
approach To investigate whether the currently discussed effector molecules and signaling
mechanisms of STa/linaclotide-induced diarrhea have similar relevance in vivo than at the …
Background
The molecular basis for heat-stable Escherichia coli enterotoxin (STa) action and its synthetic analogue linaclotide is well understood at the enterocyte level. Pharmacologic strategies to prevent STa-induced intestinal fluid loss by inhibiting its effector molecules, however, have achieved insufficient inhibition in vivo.
Aims and experimental approach
To investigate whether the currently discussed effector molecules and signaling mechanisms of STa/linaclotide-induced diarrhea have similar relevance in vivo than at the enterocyte level, we studied the effect of 10−7M of the STa analogue linaclotide on short circuit current (Isc) of chambered isolated jejunal mucosa, and on the in vivo action on fluid transport in a perfused segment of proximal jejunum of anesthetized mice. The selected mice were deficient of transport (NHE3, CFTR, Slc26a3/a6), adaptor (NHERF1-3), or signal transduction molecules [cGMP-dependent kinase II (GKII)] considered to be downstream effectors after STa/linaclotide binding to guanylate cyclase C (GCC). Selective NHE3 inhibition by tenapanor was also employed.
Key results, conclusions and implications
The comparison allowed the separation of effectors for stimulation of electrogenic anion secretion and for inhibition of electrolyte/fluid absorption in response to STa/linaclotide. The cGKII-NHERF1-CFTR and cGKII-NHERF2-NHE3 interactions are indeed major effectors of small intestinal fluid loss downstream of GCC activation in vitro and in vivo, but 50% of the linaclotide-induced fluid loss in vivo, while dependent on CFTR activation and NHE3 inhibition, does not involve cGKII, and 30% does not depend on NHERF1 or NHERF2. A combined NHERF1 and NHERF2 inhibition appears nevertheless a good pharmacological strategy against STa-mediated fluid loss.
Elsevier